Abstract

Abstract. Large open-ocean polynyas, defined as ice-free areas within the sea ice pack, have only rarely been observed in the Southern Ocean over the past decades. In addition to smaller recent events, an impressive sequence occurred in the Weddell Sea in 1974, 1975 and 1976 with openings of more than 300 000 km2 that lasted the full winter. These big events have a huge impact on the sea ice cover, deep-water formation, and, more generally, on the Southern Ocean and the Antarctic climate. However, we have no estimate of the frequency of the occurrence of such large open-ocean polynyas before the 1970s. Our goal here is to test if polynya activity could be reconstructed using continental records and, specifically, observations derived from ice cores. The fingerprint of big open-ocean polynyas is first described in reconstructions based on data from weather stations, in ice cores for the 1970s and in climate models. It shows a signal characterized by a surface air warming and increased precipitation in coastal regions adjacent to the eastern part of the Weddell Sea, where several high-resolution ice cores have been collected. The signal of the isotopic composition of precipitation is more ambiguous; thus, we base our reconstructions on surface mass balance records alone. A first reconstruction is obtained by performing a simple average of standardized records. Given the similarity between the observed signal and the one simulated in models, we also use data assimilation to reconstruct past polynya activity. The impact of open-ocean polynyas on the continent is not large enough, compared with the changes due to factors such as atmospheric variability, to detect the polynya signal without ambiguity, and additional observations would be required to clearly discriminate the years with and without open-ocean polynya. Thus, it is reasonable to consider that, in these preliminary reconstructions, some high snow accumulation events may be wrongly interpreted as the consequence of polynya formation and some years with polynya formation may be missed. Nevertheless, our reconstructions suggest that big open-ocean polynyas, such as those observed in the 1970s, are rare events, occurring at most a few times per century. Century-scale changes in polynya activity are also likely, but our reconstructions are unable to precisely assess this aspect at this stage.

Highlights

  • Polynyas are ice-free oceanic areas within the sea ice pack

  • Additional information on the spatial structure of the changes during polynya formation can be obtained from a reconstruction of the surface mass balance (Medley and Thomas, 2019) that combines ice core data and atmospheric reanalysis fields in order to cover the whole grounded Antarctic ice sheet over the past 200 years

  • Small coastal band between 50◦ W and 0◦, with maximum values a bit lower than 1 ◦C in a few coastal regions. These values on the continent are smaller than those observed at Halley station for the same time periods, suggesting that the observed anomalies cannot be fully attributed to the polynya formation, that the simulations underestimate the temperature changes over the continent due to the great Weddell Sea polynya formation or that a combination of the two occurs

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Summary

Introduction

Polynyas are ice-free oceanic areas within the sea ice pack. They are regularly observed close to the coasts of Antarctica where very strong winds coming from the continent push the sea ice away from the shore as soon as it is formed (Comiso and Gordon, 1987; Morales Maqueda et al, 2004). The warmer, saltier waters at depth are strongly cooled when they reach the surface by direct exchanges with the atmosphere, become denser and sink again to great depths This convection provides a preconditioning for subsequent years as it maintains a low stability of the water column, explaining why open-ocean convection and polynya formation can be sustained over several years. To our knowledge, no high-resolution ocean sediment core that might provide a direct record of polynya activity is available, and, to date, no reconstruction of polynya occurrence has been developed for the past centuries This implies that the frequency of open-ocean polynya formation is basically unknown. The final section (Sect. 5) presents the conclusions of our analyses and discusses some perspectives for future developments

Observations
Model results
Reconstruction methods
Fingerprint of polynyas in the observations and models
Reconstructing past polynya activity
Findings
Discussion and conclusions
Full Text
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